Other
Scientific paper
Jun 1870
adsabs.harvard.edu/cgi-bin/nph-data_query?bibcode=1870natur...2..122r&link_type=abstract
Nature, Volume 2, Issue 33, pp. 122-123 (1870).
Other
Scientific paper
DR. INGLEBY is curious to know what Prof. Helmholtz would say on this vexed question. If Dr. Ingleby will turn to page 630 of the ``Physiologische Optik,'' he will find that Prof. Helmholtz has anticipated his wishes. As others of your readers may be interested in seeing how the matter is treated by one who is facile princeps in this department, I subjoin a translation of the passage. If the curious experiment mentioned by Dr. Ingleby had referred only to the vertical diameter of the disc, it would have seemed to be another illustration of our inveterate tendency to ascribe an exaggerated value to vertical lines or angles, at or near the horizon. It is said that if ten men be required to fix off-hand on a star half way between the zenith and horizon, nine, at least, will choose one very much too low. If an exact square be cut out in paper and pinned against the wall opposite to the eye, the sides will appear longer than the top or bottom. If an equilateral triangle be placed in the same position, the angles at the base will appear larger than the angle at the vertex. If a line be drawn parallel to the bottom of a sheet of paper, and a second line, making with it an angle of 20° or 30°, any one attempting, without moving the paper, to draw a third line through the point of intersection, so as to make an angle with the second line equal to that which the second makes with the first, will make the second angle too large. (This experiment is guaranteed by Helmholtz.) After reading Helmholtz's theory, metaphysicians may be willing to allow that all these illusions are to be derived, after his example, from the clouds. As metaphysicians have, before now, contributed a good deal to the clouds, it is perhaps only fair that the clouds should contribute something to the metaphysicians.
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